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The first of 2 sweet potato harvests

Posted: Mon Sep 20, 2010 11:20 am
by engineeredgarden
I grow sweet potatoes in containers each year (well, homemade ones at least), and recall that I promised a while back to show my harvest when they were ready. (I think it was to gixx or somebody?) Anyway, here's a video of the first of 2 harvests. I hope you enjoy it!

EG


https://engineeredgarden.blogspot.com/2010/09/first-of-two-sweet-potato-harvests-for.html

Posted: Mon Sep 20, 2010 2:47 pm
by gumbo2176
Looks like you got a decent crop out of those bins. Great idea for saving ground space in the garden and to have your soil loose and deep enough for the tubers to grow and develop. Plus, your gardening buddy is quite enthusiastic to help get in the way from time to time. I can see that dog really likes being around you. Your shepherd sure looks fit and well taken care of.

Posted: Mon Sep 20, 2010 3:56 pm
by LindsayArthurRTR
Ha! Love your doggy! And your taters are nice, too :()

Love the setup.

Posted: Mon Sep 20, 2010 3:58 pm
by lilcee
Very nice crop of sweet potatoes. We planted some for the first time this year. What are you using for your containers? It looks a lot easier to do then having them in the ground. Any tips on growing them? Ours produced some but would like a better crop next year.

Love your dog!

Posted: Mon Sep 20, 2010 4:11 pm
by engineeredgarden
gumbo - thanks. It's the only way I've grown sp's, and really like it because of how compact everything is with it. My dog is a real stinker!

Lindsey - thanks. That's my dog Jude, and she is 2 years old. As you can tell, she's a real stinker! I'm glad you liked the video.

lilcee - Well, the containers are made from some scrap pieces leftover from making a pretty large self watering container. For reference, it's just the top 10" of a 31 gallon rubbermaid tote bin - which has landscaping fabric stapled to the rim, then turned upside down and filled with homemade compost. That's pretty much it. They get watered every couple of weeks, and a fertilizer is added once the vines begin to run - which has a really low percentage of nitrogen.

EG

Posted: Mon Sep 20, 2010 6:53 pm
by philm00x
oh my lord, some of those sweet potatoes are just enormous! and your german shep is fun to watch, too!

oh, and I had an idea for the last one you dug up that had the arm hangin' off of it. make sweet potato casserole out of it!

Posted: Mon Sep 20, 2010 6:58 pm
by gixxerific
Awesome harvest I can only hope for a portion of that in my garden this year. Though I did some investigational digging last week and there are some good sized tators in there. I think I might wait a bit but I have been itching to get in there.

Love your dog reminds me of my dog when she was younger. I used to sit and throw things right over her head and she would do the Matrix style flipping jumps. It would make any Chinese acrobat jealous.

My wife came down while I was watching the video she said "he looks like you". Not so much in looks but in how we do things. :wink:

Oh love the bin idea. I grew regular potatoes in large pots this year, not that large though. They did pretty good. Not sure what you are doing with the left over soil and don't want to tell you what to do. But when I harvested my potatoes I just up-ended the pots and it was very easy to dig out the spuds.

Posted: Tue Sep 21, 2010 10:53 am
by engineeredgarden
philm00x - I'm glad you liked it. :) Sweet potato casserole sounds like a possibility for the big tater...

gixx - I've tried irish potatoes in these same containers before, and they did terrible. Although most people throw away soil used for potatoes in containers, I just replenish with new compost each year. Due to crop rotation needs, I'll have to plant something completely different in these containers for the next couple of years, though....

EG

Posted: Tue Sep 21, 2010 11:14 am
by applestar
I had trouble paying attention to what you were doing -- I was too busy watching your dog. :lol: :wink:

I suppose with this method, you don't let the vines touch ground, set roots, and start making more potatoes? It would definitely concentrate the energy into fattening up the tubers at the base of the plants. You had some real giants! :D

I noticed that last year when the vines were allowed to sprawl uncontrolled, I ended up with maybe 3 or 4 good ones at the base, 1 or 2 where the vines touched down closest to the base, and tons of pencil thin tubers from the rest.

In the case of the really big one you dug up, do you suppose you could have "robbed" it --- just harvested the one -- so the plant would then re-distribute for the rest of the tubers to grow?

Finally, how would you rotate here -- no root crops? What else?

Oh! and what variety is it? and when did you plant the slips? (Sorry if these were in your blog).

Posted: Tue Sep 21, 2010 11:45 am
by engineeredgarden
applestar - I know - my dog always has to be the center of attention. :D
Indeed, the vines are not allowed to take root in the ground surrounding them. If I had known that one was gonna get as big as it did, I'd definitely have pulled it earlier. However, it's hard to tell exactly what's under the foliage sometimes. This variety was beauregard, and the slips were planted mid-May - I think....

EG

Posted: Tue Sep 21, 2010 11:46 am
by garden5
Nice harvest. I heard that sweet potatoes are one of the hardest things to grow in the backyard garden, do you guys agree or disagree with that statement?

I really don't care either way.....I still want to give them a try next year :wink:.

Posted: Tue Sep 21, 2010 11:52 am
by engineeredgarden
garden5 - I think climate is probably the most important factor involved for sweet potato production, and it's definitely the easiest crop I grow. However, I have tried irish potatoes 4 times, and haven't been successful yet.

EG

Posted: Tue Sep 21, 2010 12:27 pm
by applestar
Try the Potato Silos. 3'? circles of 24"H chickenwire -- mine are squashed into 2'x4' semi-circles against the fence. 5 seed potatoes/silo.
[img]https://i290.photobucket.com/albums/ll272/applesbucket/Image7002.jpg[/img]
https://www.helpfulgardener.com/forum/viewtopic.php?p=139241#139241

The ground underneath was solid compacted clay subsoil lawn. Forked, soaked, piled with grass clippings/weeds, unfinished compost, cardboarded, then soaked again. Chickenwire circles secured in place, then piled with HAY *not* straw, more grass clippings, and straw. X's cut into the cardboard and seed potatoes snuggled into the moist ground below. Mulched with more hay, occasionally compost, and grass clippings as the potato plants grew.

BEST yield ever. :D Only problem was that chipmunks discovered the potatoes and started eating them underground* -- probably lost about 1/2 dozen good potatoes :evil:

*I'm concerned for my sweet potatoes, some of which are planted in the same area. I should probably try digging around a bit, though I really need to wait until at least the end of the month for good potato development.

Posted: Tue Sep 21, 2010 7:23 pm
by Hispoptart
Wow nice harvest. I have to agree with applestar, you dog is very entertaining. We tried the potato buckets / bags they sell just for the fun of it and they didn't produce much at all.

Posted: Tue Sep 21, 2010 8:15 pm
by gixxerific
garden5 wrote:Nice harvest. I heard that sweet potatoes are one of the hardest things to grow in the backyard garden, do you guys agree or disagree with that statement?

I really don't care either way.....I still want to give them a try next year :wink:.
Definitely give them a try they are maybe not THE easiest to grow but one of the easiest and very productive too. The only down side is they take up a bit of room. But the results are very much worth it. Maybe people say that cause they are a pain to start unless you know what your are doing.

Posted: Tue Sep 21, 2010 9:18 pm
by Zapatay
Just had a chance to watch the video - very cool and congratulations on a successful crop :)

I have so many "I wonder if I could try that next season" projects - this will totally be one of them.

Thanks for sharing!

PS - As all the other comments - love the dog - what a good girl.

Posted: Tue Sep 21, 2010 10:44 pm
by engineeredgarden
applestar - that method for growing potatoes looks very interesting, and I might just have to try it for myself.

hispoptart - thanks, I'm glad you liked the video - and my dog Jude!

Zapatay - cool, I'm glad you liked it! Yep, my dog is definitely a good girl....

EG

Posted: Wed Sep 22, 2010 1:07 pm
by garden5
Thanks for the tips, Apps!

So, how many sweet potatoes do you get from one of those silos?

Are they big, like the ones you get in the store, or are they smaller?

I think climate may really be one of the biggest determining factors in the success of a sweet potato harvest.

Although, there seem to be some compact, [url=https://gardening.about.com/od/vegetables/p/Sweet-Potatoes.htm]shorter-season varieties[/url] available as well.

How do you all start your potatoes?